And, I would likely have done the work.
Today, I work on creating garments for people, I knit stockings, and I am writing a dissertation on eighteenth-century clothing and personal material culture. I think a lot on how things would have been made, and by whom, and how to make those things as proficiently, and efficiently as possible.
Sometimes I even get paid.
I say sometimes, because I am not a fully funded academic. I am not paid to think about things as academics were in the past. Institutions do not fully fund their graduate and PhD students like they once did. We struggle with wondering if our work is a valuable contribution, or is that load of laundry a bigger contribution to the overall well being of our families.
When I think on life, there's not much of the day where I would be considered 'not' working. And yet, because I do not receive a salary, cannot contribute financially to the family, my research, or the economy, is my 'work' actually valid?
Things I think about on a now much cooler, rainy day. Knitting stockings for a living historian, and trying to think about how to efficiently make these things that we all need so that I might earn a bit of actual money.
I think academia has also become 'women's work'.
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ReplyDeleteMight you ever be available as a speaker in Eastern Ontario?
ReplyDeletehello Anne, who are you wanting me to speak to? and where in Eastern Ontario? We live on the south shore outside Montreal, so it's doable, for sure. You can send me an email at kellyarlenegrant@gmail.com
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